Take a look at this...Seattle's offense was struggling quite a bit in the group of games in that first image, then all of sudden, BAM! They take off? It intrigued me, so I looked into it.
Quality of defense played, specifically when it comes to rushing the passer with exception of Pittsburgh and Minnesota, was lacking during this "run." Pittsburgh's pash rush offset by a horribly inadequate secondary that gave up one of the leagues worst totals of yards through the air and Minnesota without it's 3 best defensive players. Other than that?...None of those teams can get after the quarterback the way the better teams in the league can and the one team that's near the top, St. Louis, and they mopped 'em (8 sacks).
Let's not be
completely bias here though. Their offensive landscape has certainly changed and I belive it's quite a few factors. Lockett has emerged as a receiver since then...Marshawn got hurt at some point and even though Rawls played very well, they started to shift their focus from a running game that sets up the pass to a passing attack that sets up the run. Russell's ability to extend drives is a factor that mixes into all of this, but along with shifting their focus, Bevell is calling plays that get the ball out of Russell's hand quicker and less reliability on PA, so on and so forth. Here in Seattle, they also attribute a ton of this to a change on the offensive line, especially when it comes to the C position, but I'm not completely sold.
I'm glad Marshawn is back. He wasn't having the impact that he used to have in years past and he's probably going to come out a bit rusty. It may knock the Seahawks off their groove a bit. The key to me, is and will be, containing Russell Wilson. He
killed the Vikes on third down in their first meeting and having Barr and Harrison back will help whomever spies on Russell, while not taking a key player out of plays where Russell isn't taking off with it. TOP was skewed heavily in favor of Seattle. Minnesota, in chorus with getting their defense off the field on third downs by making stops, needs to see their offense convert a few long drives to neutralize Seattle's offense and disallow both a rusty Marshawn and a scorching Russell to find a groove...
I have more, but this is long enough for now.